
The ‘first’ AI-run ransomware attack still needed a human
Quick Answer
Researchers at Sysdig documented the first case of AI-run ransomware, JadePuffer, which autonomously executed a cyberattack but still required human involvement for setup and victim selection.
Quick Take
Researchers at Sysdig documented the first case of AI-run ransomware, JadePuffer, which autonomously executed a cyberattack but still required human involvement for setup and victim selection. The AI agent exploited vulnerabilities in Langflow and MySQL, encrypting over 1,300 records and writing its own ransom note, raising concerns about the future of ransomware campaigns.
Key Points
- JadePuffer exploited known vulnerabilities in Langflow and MySQL servers.
- The AI agent autonomously encrypted over 1,300 configuration records.
- A human was involved in setting up the operation and selecting victims.
- Sysdig could not identify the specific model driving the AI agent.
- Concerns arise about the potential for numerous simultaneous ransomware campaigns.
📖 Reader Mode
~4 min readLast week, researchers at cloud security firm Sysdig said they’d documented the first known case of “agentic ransomware.” It was an extortion operation, dubbed JadePuffer, in which an AI agent — not a human — handled the technical execution of a real-world cyberattack from start to finish. The agent broke into a vulnerable server, stole credentials, moved through the target’s network, encrypted files, and even wrote its own ransom note, adapting to obstacles along the way like a human hacker would. Coverage of the funding described it as run “without any human oversight,” with “no human at the keyboard.”
That’s not quite the full picture. In an interview on Monday with CyberScoop, Sysdig’s Michael Clark, the company’s senior director of threat research, clarified that a human was still very much involved — just not in the technical execution. “A human still set up and pointed the operation and provisioned the infrastructure behind it, the command-and-control server, the staging server used for the stolen data and chose a victim,” Clark said. The credentials used to break into the victim’s database, he added, weren’t harvested by the AI agent itself; someone obtained them separately, through a prior compromise, and handed them to the operation.
None of this contradicts Sysdig’s original claim, and the technical details of the attack remain notable on their own — wild, even. The agent got in through a known bug in Langflow, a popular open-source tool for building LLM apps, then moved on to a production MySQL server and exploited another known flaw to gain admin access. It encrypted over 1,300 configuration records and not only left behind a ransom note that it wrote itself but it left a Bitcoin address where the ransom could be sent. Sysdig hasn’t disclosed who was targeted.
The techniques were fairly ordinary apparently, what stood out was the speed and transparency involved. The agent fixed a failed login in 31 seconds, narrating its own reasoning in natural-language code comments the whole way.
One detail that initially seemed to muddy the picture has since been clarified. Clark had told CyberScoop that Sysdig found “multiple models were used in the attack,” citing harvested keys for OpenAI, Anthropic, DeepSeek, and Gemini — language that left open the question of whether several models actively powered different stages of the intrusion. Asked to clarify, Clark told TechCrunch that those keys were simply part of what the agent stole, not evidence of what was driving it.
“The agent swept the Langflow host for anything valuable — provider API keys, cloud credentials, cryptocurrency wallets, and database configs — and those provider keys were part of the loot,” he said via email. “They are indicative of what the attacker considered worth taking, but they do not tell us which model was making the decisions.”
On the model actually running JadePuffer, Clark said Sysdig “was not able to identify the specific model driving the agent” and has no visibility into its system prompt or configuration.
Microsoft researcher Geoff McDonald’s theory, offered on LinkedIn several days ago, is worth revisiting in that light. McDonald suspected an open-weight model with safety training stripped out, rather than a frontier model, was behind the attack, based on his own red-teaming experience showing frontier labs’ safety layers hold up well. Sysdig’s own account doesn’t confirm or rule that out.
McDonald’s post also warned that ransomware campaigns are now bounded primarily by attacker budget rather than human effort, raising the possibility of “thousands or tens of thousands of simultaneous campaigns.” That concern is a little harder to square with what Clark described Monday. (If a human still has to choose each victim, provision infrastructure, and obtain database credentials for every operation, that’s a bit of a bottleneck, at least.)
Either way, Clark told CyberScoop, while Sysdig hasn’t seen the same operation hit other victims yet, given how cheap it is to run an agent, he expects that to change.
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Loizos has been reporting on Silicon Valley since the late ’90s, when she joined the original Red Herring magazine. Previously the Silicon Valley Editor of TechCrunch, she was named Editor in Chief and General Manager of TechCrunch in September 2023. She’s also the founder of StrictlyVC, a daily e-newsletter and lecture series acquired by Yahoo in August 2023 and now operated as a sub brand of TechCrunch.
You can contact or verify outreach from Connie by emailing connie@strictlyvc.com or connie@techcrunch.com, or via encrypted message at ConnieLoizos.53 on Signal.
— Originally published at techcrunch.com
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